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Old Polish cuisine (Polish: kuchnia staropolska) is the cooking style typical for Polish culture in the early modern period, that is, approximately in the 16th–18th centuries.
Scholarship
editHistory
editItalianate Renaissance
editSarmatian Baroque
editSaxon Carnival
editStanislavian Enlightenment
editStandards of living
editAffordability level | Social groups | Meat and animal fats | Fish | Cereals and bread | Fruits and vegetables | Dairy | Spices and other | Beverages |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Poor | Landless peasants, petty nobility, town plebs | Pork, once or twice a year | Herrings, occasionally | Dominant food group; bran, groats, unleavend flatbread; couch grass and mannagrass sometimes used as cereals | Sorrel, goosefoot, nettle, forest berries, hazelnuts, acorns | None | Salt, sparingly | Water, sometimes beer |
Basic | Largest share of the population: middle-income peasants, manor servants, low-income townfolk, lower nobility | Pork, beef, poultry | Herrings | Dominant food group; groats and farinaceous dishes | Cabbage, carrots, peas, flat beans, rutabagas, turnips, beets | Milk, butter, cheese, eggs | Salt | Beer, vodka |
Medium | Affluent peasants, lower clergy, court servants, middle-income townsfolk and nobility | Pork, beef, poultry; fairly large amounts of lard and suet | Herrings | Groats, bread, and farinaceous dishes | Same as above, in larger quantities | Same as above, in larger quantities | Various spices | Beer, vodka |
Lordly | Affluent nobility, higher clergy, town patriciate | Plentiful and varied, three times the meat intake of an average modern Pole | Herrings, crawfish | Wheat bread and rolls, cakes, tortes | Plentiful and varied, but mostly domestic | Large amounts of butter and cream | Pepper, saffron, almonds, cloves, cinnamon, ginger, truffles and king boletes | Wine, sometimes mead |
Luxurious | Royal familiy and court, magnates, bishops | Game, pheasants, grouses, fieldfares, oysters, escargots, frogs, turtles, etc. | Carp, salmon, trout, sturgeon | Same as above | Exotic fruits, e.g., lemons, oranges, dates, figs, pineapples | Same as above | Same as above; also, cane sugar | Expensive wines and mead |
Eating habits
editMeals
editEtiquette
editFeasting and fasting
editPrince Sapieha's Easter banquet given during the reign of Vladislaus IV:
- Four roasted wild boars stuffed with suckling pigs, ham, and sausages
- Twelve roasted stags with gilded antlers, stuffed with hares, grouses, bustards, and ptarmigans
- 52 large cakes and pies, including mazurkas, all richly decorated with dried fruits and nuts
- 365 yeast cakes (babki)
- Old Hungarian, Cypriot, Spanish, and Italian wines
- 8,700 quarts of mead for the servants[1]
King Michael Korybut Wiśniowiecki's wedding with Eleonor Maria Josefa Habsburg in 1670:
- 7,000 guests
- 8 days
- 500 elks
- 100 stags
- several dozens of wild boars
- 400 oxen
- 6,000 calfs
- 4,000 rams
- 4,000 lambs
- 2,000 hares
- 300 pheasants
- 10,000 partridges
- 12,000 turkeys
- fruits and fruit preserves, jellies, marzipan, and other confectionery[2]
Jerzy Ossoliński's purely Polish banquet:[3]
Foreign ingredient | Domestic substitute |
---|---|
Wine (for sauces) | Cherry juice |
Almonds | Hazelnuts |
Raisins | Candied cherries and other fruits |
Lemons | Sour apples |
Pepper and ginger | Horseradish and mustard |
Olives and capers | Mushrooms |
Wine vinegar | Honey vinegar |
Imported wines | Beer, mead, Polish wines |
Food and drink
editCereals and breads
editFruits and vegetables
edit(including nuts and mushrooms)
Herbs and spices
editMeat
editFish
editDairy, eggs and fats
editSoups, sauces and condiments
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Confectionery
editBeverages
editReferences
editSources
editSources
edit- Bockenheim, Krystyna (1999). Przy polskim stole [At the Polish Table] (in Polish). Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie. ISBN 83-7023-661-8.
- Chwalba, Andrzej, ed. (2008). Obyczaje w Polsce: Od średniowiecza do czasów współczesnych [Customs of Poland: From the Middle Ages to Modern Times] (in Polish). Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN. ISBN 978-83-01-14253-7.
- Dembińska, Maria (1999). Weaver, William Woys (ed.). Food and Drink in Medieval Poland: Rediscovering a Cuisine of the Past. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-3224-0.
- Flandrin, Jean-Louis (2002). L'ordre des mets [Arranging the meal] (in French). Paris: Éditions Odile Jacob. ISBN 2-7381-1052-5.
- Gołębiowski, Łukasz (1830). Domy i dwory [Houses and manors] (in Polish). Warszawa: N. Glücksberg.
- Lemnis, Maria; Vitry, Henryk (1979). W staropolskiej kuchni i przy polskim stole [Old Polish Traditions in the Kitchen and at the Table] (in Polish). Warszawa: Interpress.
- Łozińska, Maja; Łoziński, Jan (2013). Historia polskiego smaku: kuchnia, stół, obyczaje [History of the Polish Taste: Kitchen, Table, Customs] (in Polish). Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN. ISBN 978-83-7705-269-3.
- Meyzie, Philippe (2010). L'alimentation en Europe à l'époque moderne [Food in Europe of the early modern period] (in French). Paris: Armand Colin. ISBN 978-2-200-25979-2.
- Pasikowski, Jerzy (2010). "Wpływy kuchni innych narodów na kształt kuchni polskiej" [Influence of other nations' cuisines on the shape of Polish cuisine]. NewsGastro. Jerzy Pasikowski radzi (in Polish). AA Catering Maria Wieczorek. Retrieved 2015-04-10.